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Ansible role for setting up a Django project running under gunicorn and/or Celery on a server

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tequila-django

This repository holds an Ansible role that is installable using ansible-galaxy. This role contains tasks used to install and set up a Django web app. It exists primarily to support the Caktus Django project template.

More complete documenation can be found in caktus/tequila.

License

This Ansible role is released under the BSD License. See the LICENSE file for more details.

Contributing

If you think you've found a bug or are interested in contributing to this project check out tequila-django on Github.

Development sponsored by Caktus Consulting Group, LLC.

Installation

Create an ansible.cfg file in your project directory to tell Ansible where to install your roles (optionally, set the ANSIBLE_ROLES_PATH environment variable to do the same thing, or allow the roles to be installed into /etc/ansible/roles). You should also enable ssh pipelining for performance (but see the warning below under _Optimizations_ first), and might optionally want to enable ssh agent forwarding.:

[defaults]
roles_path = deployment/roles/
[ssh_connection]
pipelining = True
ssh_args = -o ForwardAgent=yes -o ControlMaster=auto -o ControlPersist=60s -o ControlPath=/tmp/ansible-ssh-%h-%p-%r

Create a requirements.yml file in your project's deployment directory. It is recommended to include tequila-common, which sets up the project directory structure and users, and also tequila-nodejs and geerlingguy/nodejs to install nodejs and any front-end packages that your project requires

---
# file: deployment/requirements.yml
- src: https://github.com/caktus/tequila-common
  version: v0.8.0

- src: https://github.com/caktus/tequila-django
  version: v0.9.11

- src: geerlingguy.nodejs
  version: 4.1.2
  name: nodejs

- src: https://github.com/caktus/tequila-nodejs
  version: v0.8.0

Run ansible-galaxy with your requirements file

$ ansible-galaxy install -r deployment/requirements.yml

or, alternatively, run it directly against the url

$ ansible-galaxy install git+https://github.com/caktus/tequila-django

The project then should have access to the tequila-django role in its playbooks.

Variables

The following variables are used by the tequila-django role:

  • project_name required
  • env_name required
  • domain required
  • additional_domains default: empty list
  • is_web default: false (required: one of is_web or is_worker or is_celery_beat set to true)
  • is_worker default: false
  • is_celery_beat default: false
  • python_version default: "2.7"
  • root_dir default: "/var/www/{{ project_name }}"
  • source_dir default: "{{ root_dir }}/src"
  • venv_dir default: "{{ root_dir }}/env"
  • force_recreate_venv default: false
  • ssh_dir default: "/home/{{ project_user }}/.ssh"
  • requirements_file default: "{{ source_dir }}/requirements/{{ env_name }}.txt"
  • requirements_extra_args default: ""
  • use_newrelic default: false
  • new_relic_license_key required if use_newrelic is true
  • new_relic_version default: "" pin to a specific version of New Relic APM, e.g. "4.14.0.115"
  • supervisor_version default: "3.0"
  • cloud_staticfiles default: false
  • gunicorn_num_workers required
  • gunicorn_num_threads optional (note: gunicorn sets this at 1 if --threads=... is not given)
  • project_user default: "{{ project_name }}"
  • project_settings default: "{{ project_name }}.settings.deploy"
  • secret_key required
  • db_name default: "{{ project_name }}_{{ env_name }}"
  • db_user default: "{{ project_name }}_{{ env_name }}"
  • db_host default: 'localhost'
  • db_port default: 5432
  • db_password required
  • cache_host optional
  • broker_host optional
  • broker_password optional
  • celery_app default: "{{ project_name }}" (e.g. the app name passed to celery -A APP_NAME worker)
  • celery_worker_extra_args default: "--loglevel=INFO"
  • celery_events default: false
  • celery_camera_class default: "django_celery_monitor.camera.Camera"
  • static_dir default: "{{ root_dir }}/public/static"
  • media_dir default: "{{ root_dir }}/public/media"
  • log_dir default: "{{ root_dir }}/log"
  • repo required: dict containing url and branch
  • source_is_local default: false
  • github_deploy_key required if source_is_local is false
  • local_project_dir required if source_is_local
  • extra_env default: empty dict
  • project_subdir default: "" - if a project's main source directory is a subdir of the git repo checkout top directory, e.g. manage.py is not in the top directory and you have to cd to a subdirectory before running it, then set this to the relative path of that subdirectory.
  • wsgi_module default: {{ project_name }}.wsgi - allow configuring an alternate path to the project's wsgi module.
  • use_uwsgi default: false - use uWSGI instead of gunicorn to run the web app.
  • uwsgi_ini_path default: "{{ root_dir }}/uwsgi.ini" - path to the uWSGI configuration file for this app.
  • uwsgi_processes default: 10 - number of uWSGI worker processes to run.
  • uwsgi_extra_ini_settings default: "" - string containing extra options to set in the uWSGI configuration file. Each line in the string should normally contain key = value pairs.
  • project_port default: 8000 - what port Django listens on
  • app_packages default: [] - additional system packages to install in addition to the default_app_packages (refer to defaults/main.yml for the default package list).

The extra_env variable is a dict of keys and values that is desired to be injected into the environment as variables, via the envfile.j2 template, which will be uploaded as a .env file for use with the django-dotenv library. Variables will be injected into this file wrapped in single-quotes, so no additional escaping needs to be done to make them safe.

Note that if source_is_local is set to false, a Github checkout key needs to be provided in the environment secrets file, and that key needs to be added to the repo's settings within Github. Alternatively, if source_is_local is set to true, the user's local checkout of the repo is rsynced into the environment, with a few exclusions (.pyc files, the .git directory, the .env file, and the node_modules directory).

The cloud_staticfiles variable is to allow for the case where the Django static files are being collected to an external service, such as S3. In that case, we don't want to be running collectstatic on every web instance, since they'll be getting in each other's way. This variable set to true causes the collectstatic task to be run only once.

The is_celery_beat variable is used to specify which server instance will run celery beat, a worker dedicated to running tasks that are specified to execute at specific times. Generally, you only want one instance running celery beat at a time, to prevent scheduled tasks from attempting to be executed more than once. It is recommended to set aside an inventory group, e.g. [beat], to distinguish this instance from your ordinary celery workers in their own group, e.g. [workers]. Your playbook(s) may then set is_celery_beat, is_worker, and is_web based on the instances' inventory group membership.

One can fold together the invocation of tequila-django into a single playbook that uses group checking to set the parameters used, like so:

---
- hosts: web:worker:beat
  become: yes
  roles:
    - role: tequila-django
      is_web: "{{ 'web' in group_names }}"
      is_worker: "{{ 'worker' in group_names }}"
      is_celery_beat: "{{ 'beat' in group_names }}"

The celery_events and celery_camera_class variables are used to enable and configure Celery event monitoring using the "snapshots" system, which allows worker activity to be tracked in a less expensive way than storing all event history on disk. Setting celery_events to true will set up the celery events command to be run alongside the other Celery commands. By default this will use the django-celery-monitor app as its snapshot "camera", so either ensure that this app is installed in your project or change celery_camera_class to a string naming the alternative camera class to use (e.g. myapp.Camera). For more on Celery event monitoring, see the docs.

Optimizations

You can turn on SSH pipelining (http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/intro_configuration.html#pipelining) to speed up ansible commands (by minimizing SSH operations). Add the following to your project's ansible.cfg file

[ssh_connection]
pipelining = True

Warning: this will cause deployments to break if securetty is used in your server's /etc/sudoers file.

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Ansible role for setting up a Django project running under gunicorn and/or Celery on a server

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